Boomer Pitches Motorola’s Follow Me TV

Boomer Esiason was Motorola’s Follow Me TV pitchman at yesterday’s press event in NYC. Follow Me TV consists of DVR web scheduling, multi-room viewing between set-top boxes within the home, media streaming from a PC to set-top box, and content offloading for playback on portable devices such as cell phones. Multi-room viewing is already active … Read more

TiVo v EchoStar Update, Part 2

While Davis Freeberg believes recent developments in the TiVo/Echostar patent infringement suit may indicate an imminent settlement, a ZNF secret agent has a different take. -DZ

The story so far
TiVo filed a patent infringement suit against Echostar covering most of Echostar’s DVRs. In April, a jury found that Echostar infringed TiVo’s patent on all the contested claims, that the patent was valid, and that the infringement was willful. The jury awarded TiVo about $73 million dollars in damages. Later the judge in the case increased the damages to about $88 million (for interest during the period of infringement and damages and interest from the time between the jury award and the final judgment). He also ordered an injunction, preventing Echostar from further use or sale of the infringing DVRs (i.e., Echostar had to turn off more than three million of their customer’s DVRs). Echostar appealed the verdict, and was given a stay of the injunction.

What just happened
Recently Echostar made a motion to the appeals court to extend the time, by 60 days, for them to file their so-called “Blue Brief” (i.e., the appellant’s primary brief to the court). The brief was due 10/23. It was an unusual request because appeals courts are notoriously unforgiving, and would likely reject such a request unless it was for a very good reason. Tivo responded to the motion, and Echostar replied to TiVo’s response.

Today, the motion was ruled moot (i.e., irrelevant), because the court issued this order:

ORDERED: Briefing schedule stayed. EchoStar to notify this court within 14 days of date of disposition of final postjudgment motion in dist ct.

What this means is that the entire appeal has been put on hold. Why? Because the court has determined that some aspect of the “final postjudgment motion” must be resolved before the case can proceed. (This issue was probably the reason that Echostar requested the delay, but the court, being no-nonsense, realized that 60 days was arbitrary, and simply said, “tell us when it has been resolved”.)

What is the issue?
The real question is what this “final postjudgment motion” is, and what does it contain that would put the appeal on hold? Not having the actual order from the court, we have to speculate. As I see it, there are two possibilities:

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TiVo v EchoStar Update, Part 1

Davis Freeberg believes recent developments in the TiVo/Echostar patent infringement suit may indicate an imminent settlement. -DZ

In the latest twist for the blogosphere’s favorite patent telenovela, the Federal Appeals court overseeing the current stage of TiVo’s patent case against Dish, has put EchoStar’s patent appeal on pause for the next 14 days, pending the settlement of the case. According to the Pacer court of appeals website, the following entry was recorded last night.

10/30/2006: ORDERED: Briefing schedule stayed. EchoStar to notify this court within 14 days of date of disposition of final postjudgment motion in dist ct. By: Motions Panel. Judge: Gajarsa
SERVICE: by Mail on 10/30/2006

In addition to this order item, there was also the following action posted on the site:

ACTION: Entry 27: Motion moot

While I don’t play a legal expert on TV or even pretend to understand the subtle legalese of the Pacer website, I did contact a friend of mine who is an attorney in Texas, and he said that the order likely meant that TiVo and Echostar are very close to a settlement, but that the details haven’t been completely finalized.

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Vlogging Killed the Blogger Star?

It’s starting. Now that we’ve had full blog network saturation, it’s time to kick into gear with video log (vlog) networks. Brightcove announced Monday the launch of Brightcove Network, a free service for anyone looking to start their own commercial Internet video channel. In a nutshell, Brightcove is trying to capitalize on the phenomenon spawned … Read more

Interesting News Dave Hasn’t Covered

Never enough time… Summary of 3Q Netflix subscribers and finances. (Hacking Netflix) TiVo, the thrill is gone. (Denver Post) Q&A with Sling Media’s European VP. (e-consultancy) AT&T U-Verse getting HD model and web console in November. (EngadgetHD)

Does Mari Need HD?

I’ve had a DVR for five years now, but I still haven’t picked up an HDTV. Honestly, I have trouble believing I need it and trouble believing it will make that much of a difference in my TV-watching career. Which is why Dave Winer’s recent commentary got my attention: He didn’t offer any great new … Read more

Time Warner Cable Launches Network DVR (Sort Of)

Folks in San Antonio are getting a free TWC upgrade today in the form of “Start Over,” a service that lets you restart a show in progress using an existing digital cable box. It’s not exactly a full fledged DVR, but it’s an interesting spin on the “network DVR” concept for folks who don’t get … Read more

Is Our Online Digital Media Safe?

I hear ya… You want to know who Mari is. I’ll have a proper intro up in the next day or so. Stay tuned! -DZ

youtube.gifSeveral news organizations are reporting that YouTube has wiped nearly 30,000 videos from its site after a Japanese audit fingered the clips for copyright infringement. Aside from the rights management concerns, this brings up an interesting issue for those who upload and store content on remote servers: When content isn’t stored locally, it isn’t under your control…

In this case it may have been perfectly reasonable for YouTube to remove 30,000 files, but these situations won’t always be black and white. There’s a growing trend towards moving our content off local devices — online word processing applications, photo storage sites, even under-development Network DVRs. While remote storage has its benefits, there are also disadvantages that shouldn’t be ignored. The ability for providers to delete files at will is one of them.

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